Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 235, 3 October 1922 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM - - AND SUN-TELEGRAM Published Every Evening Except Sunday by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building, North Ninth and Sailor Streets. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, aa - - Second-Class Mall Matter. MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATEIJ PRESS , The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use Tor republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited Jn this paper, and also the local new published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Reforestation in Indiana Too few Indiana farmers appreciate the value of a woodlot, is the belief of Charles C.- Deam, state forester, whose report on 147 woods in 47 counties shows that farmers are slow in taking advantage of a law enacted by the last legislature which permits the classification of woodlands to encourage the growing of timber. The conservation department has a pamphlet for free distribution on the management of the woodlot. Small trees for reforestation purposes also are available. . "Hundreds of woodland owners applied, and several thousand acres of land, some unfitted for any other purpose than growing trees, will soon be classified and put to forests," Mr. Deam says. "Most any kind of land will classify, providing it has a good stand of trees, either large or small, and if the owner signs an agreement that he will keep all kinds of live stock out of it during the time it remains a woodland. Once classified the land is appraised at $1 an acre for taxation.' "Many owners of potential land fail to realize the value of such a possession other than as it is looked upon as a kind of a bank account from which one may draw cash quickly by cutting the timber if in need of ready money' he said. "Few pay any attention to future growth, and many, in order to obtain cash quickly, cut even the smaller trees, which by every deduction should be left to grow to maturity and provide "more timber. When no step is taken toward reforestation it means that when the present stand is cut the" land will be clear. In the opinion of conservation officials, this is waste, for much of the land now in forests will never produce consistently good agricultural crops, and. some cannet even be farmed because of the broken and uneven topography."
Photographing the Great Photographers in Washington Always on Alert to Snap Prominent Personalities and Big Events.
By FREDERICK J. HASK1N WASHINGTON, D. C, Oct. 3 When Justice John Hessin Clarke resigned from the supreme court the other day he did a service not only to the man appointed to succeed him but also though quite incidentally, to one or more news photographers in Washingtion. A new justice on the supreme bench menns a new photograph of tlvj supreme court, and a new photograph of the supreme court is worth hundreds of dollars to the photographer who secures it. But photographing the supreme court is all in the day's business for the news photographer in the national capital, although not many photographs are so valuable. A photograph of the supreme court ha3 a historic value which causes it to be purchased not only by newspapers and magazines but -also by lawyers, law libraries, "et aii to use legal phraseolgy. Yet it frefpently happens that the news .. jUotdgrapher by some lucky shot secttre a picture that outdistances the "J'ormil photograph cf the supreme ' jus;3es as a seller. This is usually view tf some great man in an unposed and human attitude the well-known picture of Mrs. Hardin? fastening a rotten her distinguished husband's bult'iihole was an example but it raiV bo merely a still picture of some sfrnlc" phase. I The man who first photographed j the reflection of the capitol's dome j on the wet asphalt made himself a small fortune. How many copies oi i the photograph of the blossoming cherry trees along the tidal basin in Washington have been sold? Tens of thousands of them. Some day, when the landscaping of the approach to the ; Lincoln Memorial is done, some lucky - button prosser will get that right; and - there will be another fortune made. No other city in the world is so thoroughly photographed, both as to - its distinfjUishd inhabitants and visi- , tors and a; to its streets and buildings as Washington. The firm of Harris ' & Ewinsr nlono owns over haif a mil- ' lion negatives of Washington pictures ; cf news value past and present. Th ; firm of Trn1ervrGod& Underwood, although established in Washington onlyj i tor a few years, also possesses an : enormous file. Derides these there . are several other photographers whose I business is primarily a studio business ibut who deal in new photographs to a I greater or less extent. It is probably : cafe to estimate that there now exists the negatives of a million new photographs of Washington and its people ; taken by professional photographers. ;And the oldest of those negatives is not much more thpn 15 years old. I Photographers Rank With Reporters. The business of photographing the progress of our government has grown " to ho as highly specialized as that of reporting it in print. The photographer has taken his place along with thj . Washington correspondent. News photographers have their regular station " at the White House, for instance, just ; as do the representatives of the press : associations. This is all an ultra moi- ! era development. ' Infants born before ; tho modem action news photograph ? was understood at all are still minors. J Yet today there is scarcely any phase "of histoiical progress anywhere in the world that is not being completely r preserved in photographs. To appreciate the truth of this state--raent, the reader has only to search his recollection for a mental image ot say. President Benjjamin Harrison in ' some active poee. He has no such - recollection, for he never saw an ac- ' tion picture of Harrison. Except for those who saw President Harrison in I life the Dublic today has no better "means of knowing what he really Hooked like than it has of knowing . what Julius Caesar loked like. It has " some formal portraits and that Is all. The tame Is substantially true of Presidents Cleveland and MoKinley; al-
THE
What the Kaiser's Memoirs Reveal The ex-kaiser's autobiography reveals quite distinctly his desire to rule absolutely from the very day he assumed direction of the old German empire. His narrative, for instance, of the steps leading to the dismissal of Bismarck show his fear of the popularity of the Iron Chancellor and a poorly disguised apprehension that Bismarck was seeking dynastic rights for his own house. The relation between the ex-kaiser and Bismarck has been a matter of speculation for years, and the kaiser's contribution to the episode has not served to improve his standing with the German people. Reports from Germany say the exemperor's presentation ha3 enhanced the. regard of the nation for the former chancellor. It seems clear to the German people, press reports say, that the removal of Bismarck by the ex-kaiser, marked the ending of a successful foreign policy and the beginning of an unsuccessful one which terminated in the World war. ' The exkaiser's determination "to go it alone," to make every department subservient to his will, which is clearly brought "out in the' memoirs, confirms the American viewpoint that the world is better off with Wilhelm in exile and disgrace than ruling on the German throne. His efforts to show that the seeds of the World war are to be found in an alleged secret treaty between the United States, Great Britain and France is another canard that is as amusing as it is far-fetched. The war had its origin in the ex-kaiser's . ambition to be the most powerful ruler in the world, an ambition that led him to violate the neutrality of Belgium, to countenance the sinking of the Lusitania, to order an unrestricted submarine warfare, to violate the laws of humanity, to permit his representatives in this country to blow up factories, to shamelessly violate the laws of neutrality, and to seek success by every means whatsoever, irrespective of the rights of others.
show how wrong and unjust it was, the memoirs from his own hand provide the necessary proof.
He paints his own picture, and it is true to the likeness which the world has made for itself a
ruler with tyrannical ambitions.
though motion pictures had been invented by McKinley's time, and the movie camera was turned upon him. But the photographing of news, as we now know it, began during Roosevelt's .administration, when Barney Clinedinst, a Washington photographer, imported from Germany a camera with a shutter so rapid that it would stop upon the photographic plate the swiftest kinds of action. No man was more respective to new ideas than Roosevelt; and when Clinedinst toH Roosevelt about the new camera, the President Invited the photographer to test the new instrument by taking some snapshots of T. R. on horsebac . The famous photograph of Roosevelt vaulting a five-bar fence on a horse was the result of that first appointment a photograph that is said tc have made Clinedinst over $20,000. It was the forerunner of the modern action picture of public men. Roosevelt was the best cf all presidential subjects for the camera. He was a man of striking actions, and he was that most excellent of all posers, the man who can be utterly himse'f in front of the camera's eye. But T. R. had something more: he could sit in i studic and register a portrait that fair ly glowed with his own personality. Other public men can get this result occasionally, and then they secure what they cherish as their best pictures; but Roosevelt had the facility all the time. it was legendary the number ot times President Roosevelt was nhotographed, but the cameras have clicked even more industriously in the vicinity of his successors. That is because of the increasing public demand for pictures and the increasing number of cameras to supply the demand. Mr. Taft did not 3eem to lend himself well to photography his pictures were all much alike but Mr. Wilson came In to be another good subject and was often photographed until his illness after his return from the peace conforonce. Since then pictures of Mr. Wilson have been extremely hard to get. Mrs. Wilson was photographer, less than any modern mistress of the Whita House. Harding Much Photographed. Mr. Harding is an exceptionally good subject for the photographer. He poses well, as if conscious of the lens, and gets, a great deal of personality Into the pictures. Since his nomination for the Presidency two years ago he has probably been the most photo graphed man in the world. Harris & Ewing alone have a thousand pic tures or mm. It becomes evident from what has been said of the taking of the Roose velt horseback picture that these snap shots of the great in action, pictures that seem casual and accidental, are in reality staged and arranged affairs. And so they are most of them. Not long ago there was published a photo graph of President Harding playing goir on the public links in Washington one morning before most folks had eaten their breakfasts. The unsophisticated must have wondered how the photographer, too, happened-to be there at that early hour. He didn't happen to be there it was arranged in advance, Each day the president's schedule for next day is given out to the correspondents at the White House. If any of these activities lend tnemseives to news pictures, the pho tographers arrange to be there. Now CI T THIS OUT IT IS WORTH MOSEY Cut out this slip, enclose with 5c and mail it to Foley & Co., 2835 Sheffield Ave., Chicago. 111., writing your name and address clearly. You will receive in return a trial package containing r oity s noney ana iar compound lor coughs, colds and croup; Folev Kidney Pills for pains in sides and back: rheu matism, backache, kidney and bladder ailments; and Foley Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome and thoroughly cleansing cathartic for constipation, biliousness, headaches, and sluggish bowels. A. G. Luken Drug Co., 626-623 Main St. Advertisement.
RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND
If the ex-kaiser's cause lacked anything to
I After Dinner Tricks I ! tor i
No. 304 The Snake and the Bird Cuf out the drawing of the snake and the bird shown above. Tell nome one the trick is to make the snake eat the bird, and see if he can do it. The trick is very easy, depending upon a simple optical Illusion. Bring the paper slowly up toward the eyes until the nose almost touches the dotted lines. Tho bird will seem to come closer to the snake, and will suddenly appear to fly lntc the snake's mouth. Copyright, ittl. by Public Ledger Company and then the photographers are able to pull off stunts of their own devising. In spite of the willingness of the modern public official to be photographed, the news photographers are not cynical when it comes to the essential modesty of such men. Many notables, were they to consult their own feelings, would shrink from the camera as does the rare individual who holds up a newspaper in front or his face to prevent the photographer rrom giving him unwelcome publicity. But public men, most of them, believe in full publicity; and they feel that the public has just as much right to see what they look like as it has to read about what they are doing. And so they submit to the snapshot as a duty that comes to them with office. Now and then, however, there comes the rare individual who objects. General Dawes was one of these. When he was first made director of the budget he held his famous meeting with the governmental heads; and in hi3 speech, to illustrate how useless governmental employes should be swept out and expenses cut down, he waved a new broom in front of his audience. Government economy was then the watchword; and a photograph of General Dawes waving his broom would have been good. But he refused to pose. The photographers appealed tc President Harding, who was there: but he only replied, with a laugh, "No, this is Geral Dawes' own show. I'll not interfere." Later on a photographer happened to surprise General Dawes on the Capitol steps. He secured a good picture, and after that the picturesque general was not so camera-shy. There is one familiar figure in Washington, a man who on several occasions has been prominently in the public eye, who has never been photographed. This man is Andrew Furuseth, the head of the Seamen,'s Union and the man who is as much responsible as any other for the provisions of the LaFollette law regulating the conduct of our-merchant marine. So far as is known here, no picture of Andrew Furusetb has ever been published. More than once Furaseth has made bodily attacks upon photographers who attempted to defy his wishes. Sheiks in Arabia now -wear wrist watches with radium dials. REDUCE YOUR FAT WITHOUT DIETING Tears ago the formula for fat reduction was "diet" "exercise." Today it is "Take Marmoia Prescription Tablets." Friends tell friends these friends tell others. They eat substantial food, live as they like and still reduce steadily and easily without going through Ions sieges of tiresome exercise and starvation diet. Marmola Tablets are sold by all druggists the world over at one dollar for a case, or If you prefer you can order direct from the Varmola -Company, 4612 Woodward Jve.. Detroit, ilich. Advertisement.
SUN - TELEGRAM, RICHMOND,
H 5HAVES OM vSuwDAY NOT SO GOOD CtO OW DKIESDAV HE 2. JTpTwV r-r a i LiToeSDfxY LOOKS LIK A om Thursday we al friu are Satvjroa PRAY HE'LU iHAVE BETORF A3HA1seo To HAVE THANKFUL THE WCXT IAY AMOTHER DAY TRAVgLlNG MENl 5EC H'N SUNDAY So . I . he cam start (L . GettaI AGAIM.- - SHAVEy
Answers to Questions (Any reader can get the answer to any question by writing' The Palladium Information Bureau. Frederick J. Haskin, director, Washington, D. C. This offer applies strictly to information. The bureau does not give advice on legal, medical and financial matters. It does not attempt to settle domestic troubles, nor to undertake exhaustive research on any subject. Write your question plainly and briefly. Give full name and address and enclose two cents in stamps for return postage. All replies are sent direct to the inquirer. Q. Is "Copyright, 1922," attached to a newspaper article, the correct form to use for its protection? I. W. D. A. The copyright law prescribes the form thus: "Copyright, 1923 by John Smith." Any person who attaches ft copyright notice to his material without promptly afterwards complying with the formality of depositing printed copies with claim of copyright for registration, fails to comply with the express requirements of the law, and cannot bring suit for infringement until he has done so. Q. How many women are there in the German reichstag? E. C. A. There are now 61 women in this governing body. Q. Where can I get the coins stamied with handpresses from carefully burnished dies at the mint? D. R. K. A. The office of the director of the mint says that proof coins are no longer made. Q. How much will a magnet lift? R. F. D. A. A piece of hardened tool steel in the shape of a horseshoe can be magnetized to lift approximately 10 pounds per square inch. As the cross section is increased, the length must be increased proportionately to retain thi6 strength per unit area. Q. How much sulphur is used to the pound of crude rubber for automobile tires? B. S. P. . A. About li ounces of sulphur is used to one pound of crude rubber. Q. What state first created a bureau or department of labor? A. The oldest labor bureau or department of labor of the various states is that of Massachusetts, which was organized in 1869. Q. When was imprisonment for debt abolished? I. J. A. The abolition of imprisonment for debt in this country began in Kentucky in 1821. Q. Did lacquer work originate in Japan or in China? F. C. V. A. While the art of lacquer work was first known to the Chinese and taught by them to the Japanese, this latter nation has so far excelled all others that authorities have said that lacquer in all its uses and decorations is a truly Japanese belonging. Rippling Rhymes By Walt Mason SPECULATION Sometimes I murmur and repine, and all my life seems sad and sour, for every time I buy a mine it fizzles out in half an hour. Oh, some grow rich by digging gold or tin or pewter from the earth, and all the stocks and shares they hold are things of an increasing worth. But when I buy up mining shares production in a minute stops; the mine has joined the other snares, the bottom from the venture drop3. Ail round me wealthy men reside, they made their bundles out of oil; in pomp and panoply they ride, they needn't buckle down to toil. I've heard them as they talked and chaffed, their fortunes never know a hitch; it seems to be an easy graft to deal in oil and so get rich. But when that sort of thing I'd try, and buy a well with hard-earned yen, in half a day that well goes dry, 'and I. am busted once again. Some grievous lessons I have learned, but not for long a lesson sticks; throughout my pilgrimage I've yearned to blow myself for gilded Another One added to the long list of people that have been restored to health by Redwood's Tepee Tonic, on Saturday Mr. John Leonard, R. R. D Box 244 passed a tape worm 22 leet long that he had been troubled with for four years. Redwood says that hundreds of people have these parasites and don't realize what ails them, they treat for almost every ailment that man is troubled with but the right one, if you are In doubt as to what to do for that tired all gone feeling, irregular appetite, loss of sleep and energy, try a bottle of Tepee Tonic from Quigley's drug store. Redwood gives his free health talks and free show every night at 7:30 at 5th and South G streets. Come and enjoy an evening's fun. Advertisement.
IND., TUESDAY, OCT. 3, 1922.
There's at Least One in Every Office
TODAY'S TALK Ey George Matthew Adams, Author of "You Can," "Take It," -Up" A TALK TO STENOGRAPHERS You are by no means among the unimportant of this earth- But for your conscientious and loyal industry, the pace of business life would have to be lessened a most appreciable amount. Your work is great. To it you must not only lend your fingers and your bodily strength, but your mind. The mere mechanics of your machine are soon and easily mastered, but the task of properly composing and placing the words that you transcribe upon your machine is a thing to which you can properly put the best thought within you. It is for this last that you must expect much of the reward that you merit. The letters which a firm sends out are its voice to the world. They cannot, therefore, be written with too much care and thought. A good stenographer should be a good grammarian, a student of human nature, and one whose judgment may be respected. For it is not all merely to transcribe a letter as dictated. Letters often flow from a man in imperfect style. It should be the task of the stenographer to catch the little clips of words and thought, and edit them into smoothness and concise meaning, if necessary. Accuracy should not be sacrificed for speed. Many an important case at law has hinged upon the wording of a letter, and it is the business of you who write letters to be on the alert for any slips of tact or meaning. The big man welcomes any suggestion from an intelligent stenographer. Take pride in a neat letter. Neatness in a letter is as important as neatness in dress on the part of the salesman. Never consciously return a letter to your, chief with an error in it. Look it over carefully after you have written it. Be neat in your dress and dignified in your deportment. Be dead in earnest in all that you do. Be prompt at your desk, ready for the work of the day at the hour of opening not fifteen minutes after. Remember that the unnecessary time you spend fixing your hair or in the rest room, is time taken from the one who pays you. ; Keep your desk clean, and in perfect order. And treat the typewriter as though it belonged to you. Oil and care for it daily as a part of your work. And don't gossip about your employer or the other people who are your associates in work. Remember that your employer is a human being, full of the common faults of his kind. Respect his best qualities and play up to them. There is no more confidential position in an office than that of the stenographer. Respect this position or yours. These are but a few suggestions, but by them you will be able to grow in efficiency and happiness as well as worth. And in such measure as you achieve by them will your value to your employer be felt.
bricks. Some day, I think, a brick will prove to be of pure and yellow gold; as down the poorhouse road I move, this fatous belief I hold. Some day my wells will turn out grease, and I'll have diamonds on my hat; some day my swans will all be geese, my goat will be a Maltese cat. Mi r mi usmgs ror ine livening mm Carpentier's conqueror is now reported seeking an engagement with Dempsey. Siki and ye shall find. UNUSUAL HAPPENINGS Patron of Chinese restaurant in San Francisco leaves place after meal without remarking to-friend: "Well, you certain'y get enough for your money, but I suppose it's just as well we don't see what goes into the stuff." Taxpayers writes to New York newspaper praising its able editorials and paper fails to print letter on edi torial page. Taxi driver who promises to call for fare in front of apartment house in exactly fifteen minutes manages to get there in less than thirty-five. Movie company engages leading man whose hair looks as if it had actually i im in- -fiiT-""1 - - - ' ' ,1 " '" A Beautiful Complexion & Admiration Ladies A few days treatment with CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS will do more to clean up the skin than all the beauty treat CARTER'S ments in crea Hnn An im ITTLE perfect complexion is A caused bv a IVER sluggish liver. Million at oeoDle.old. vouns and middle age. take them for Biliousness, Dizziness, Sick Headache, Upset Stomach and for Sallow. Pimply and Blotchy Skin. They end the misery of Constipation. Small Fin Small Dote Small Price HARTMAN WARDROBE TRUNKS r B27 Main
H PILLS
St.
grown on his head and not merely been painted there. Chicago broker's clerk keeps appointment with Marshall Field saleslady without cleaning his nails on point of shears before leaving office.
&ix comic strips appear simultane ously in New York newsnanpr nil omitting final sketch of man failins over backward out of his boots after joke has been sprung on him. After Dinner Stories "Now," said tho Colonel, looking! along the line of recruits, "I want aj good, smart-looking bugler." I At that, out stepped a dilapidated ! fellow with a thick stubble of black! beard. ! "What!" said the Colonel, eyeing; him up and down, "are you a bugler?" i "Oh," he answered, "I thought you : said a burglar." Los Angeles Times, i Don't cut CORNS Don't cut corns or callouses, or fool with corros ive acids. Such methods are dangerous and don't get at the cause Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads, new discovery, stop hurting instantly; start healing ct once. They protect while they heal! Thin; antiseptic; waterproof. Absolutely safe! Special sizes for corns, callouses and bunions. At druggist's and shoe dealer's. BX Scholl's Put one on the pain U gone W. Virginia ad Pocahontas COAL Independent Ice and Fuel Company
29 North 8th
Who's Who in the Day's News
DR. ESTHER LOVEJOY The American relief work in firedevasted Smyrna is in charge of a. woman physician, Dr. Esther Lovejoy. of New YorTt and Oregon, president ot the Americam Women's hospitals. Dr. Lovejoy hashad much experience in relief work. During the gold rush to Alaska , she and her then husband, Dr. Emil Pohl, since deceased, joined the gold seekers. When they reached Alaska they found a meningitis epi 1 - iJt S. E.LOVE-JOY
demic was raging, and they promptly commandeered the largest saloon, and dance hall for an emergency hospital and succeeded in stopping the plague. Dr. Lovejoy saw service in Franco during the World war under the American Red Cross society. She was born in Seattle, Wash., the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Edward Clayson. Received her degree from the University of Oregon in 1894, and that same year married Dr. Emil Pohl, of Portland. A son, Frederick Clayson Pohl was born but died in 1908, and Dr. Pohl followed a him in 1910. Dr. Lovejoy was a mem- "' J ber of the Board of Health of Portland 1905-9 and head of the Portland Health Department 1907-9. She married George A. Lovejoy in 1912. She is the author of a book, "The House of the Good Neighbor."
Lessons in Correct English DON'T SAY: Let's BEAT it from here. Please GET ME my hat. I'll SEE YOU tomorrow at the club.. This story DOESN'T mean nothing. I am SO strong AS you. SAY: Let's CO AWAY from here. Please GET my hat. I'll MEET YOU tomorrow at the. club. This story DOES NOT mean ANYTHING. I am AS strong AS you. On Face and Neck. Very Sore. Cutieura Healed. "My face and neck were affected with pimples for several years. They festered and became very sore, and itched and burned so badly at night that it was impossible to sleep. The pimples started in small spots, but soon spread until my face and neck were one sore eruption. They caused disfigurement. " I read an advertisement for Cutieura Soap and Ointmtr.t and sent for a free sample. I purchased more, and after using three cakes of Cutieura Soap and two boxes cf Cutieura Ointment I was healed." (Signed) Miss Ruth Reynolds, Laclede, 111. Use Cutieura fcrall toilet purposes. gimplx Ew Fr-br MC AArn-"CtitjcwsLab-T.lonn. Dipt H. MkldfD 48. Kui " Sold TerywhT Soap25c. Ointment 25 nq 60c Talrom25e. Cutieura Soap shaves without mug. Thoroughly washed and properly screened GRAVEL makes BETTER concrete and doesn't cost any more than the OTHER kind. Plant No. 2 The Richmond-Greenville Gravel Company Phones 4132-4032 f
is noD
ID
in
On Savings Ssssffas w,,lf l a payments of 25o anT rTrVL Inri V" be withdrawn at any time, Intereit paid Jan. 1st and July 1st.
The PeopIe,I Home and Savings Ass'i.
St
3
f1
Safety Bcxes for Rent
